XPost: rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.policy, rec.radio.info
********************************************
The ARRL Letter
Published by the American Radio Relay League ********************************************
December 2, 2021
Editor: Rick Lindquist, WW1ME <
ww1me@arrl.org>
ARRL Home Page <
http://www.arrl.org/>ARRL Letter Archive <
http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/>Audio News <
http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/> IN THIS ISSUE
- Two 160-Meter Events in December Give Nod to 1921 Transatlantic Tests
- Dayton Hamvention Expects to be Live Event in 2022
- ARRL Podcasts Schedule
- Fall ARRL Section Manager Election Results
- YOTA Month Continues to Expand into the Americas
- ARRL Learning Network Webinars
- IARU Reports Another Over-the-Horizon Radar System is Under
Construction in India
- ARDC Grants Will Expand Emergency Capabilities in Haiti and the US
Virgin Islands
- Announcements
- Amateur Radio in the News
- ARRL Author, QST Technical Editor Joel Hallas, W1ZR, SK
- Past ARRL Rocky Mountain Division Director Claude Maer, W0IC, SK
- The K7RA Solar Update
- Just Ahead in Radiosport
- Upcoming Section, State, and Division Conventions
TWO 160-METER EVENTS IN DECEMBER GIVE NOD TO 1921 TRANSATLANTIC
TESTS
In December, there will be two opportunities for 160-meter operators to
fill the airwaves with activity and to test skills and stations on that
band. The events take place a century after the transatlantic tests of
the 1920s, which ushered in the dawn of international amateur radio communication.
The annual ARRL 160-Meter Contest <
http://www.arrl.org/160-meter>
begins at 2200 UTC on Friday, December 3, and ends at 1559 UTC on
Sunday, December 5. This 42-hour CW-only contest is most similar to the original transatlantic tests. This contest typically attracts a good
crowd and presents a challenge to operator skill and station
performance.
The Radio Society of Great Britain (RSGB <
http://www.rsgb.org/>) is
planning to activate special call signs to commemorate the centenary of
the tests. Stations from the UK and Crown Dependencies will use up to
seven different call signs, each having a "6XX" suffix: G6XX, England;
GD6XX, Isle of Man; GI6XX, Northern Ireland; GJ6XX, Jersey; GM6XX,
Scotland; GU6XX, Guernsey, and GW6XX, Wales. In addition, listen for UK stations appending the suffix "/2ZE" to the station's call sign. Use of
this commemorative suffix has been authorized for use December 1 - 26
by Ofcom, the UK's communications regulator.
On December 12 -- and not to be confused with the ARRL 160-Meter
Contest -- ARRL and the RSGB will jointly sponsoring the 160-Meter Transatlantic Centenary QSO Party <
http://www.arrl.org/transatlantic>.
This 6-hour event will run from 0200 to 0800 UTC. The event coincides
with the 100th anniversary of the successful Second Transatlantic
Tests. Participating stations will operate only on CW, trying to
contact the two official call sign activations, W1AW and GB2ZE. The
stations may listen for callers 1 kHz above their transmitting
frequency, to shift the pileup from their transmit frequency. They may
also periodically ask for DX callers only. The exchange is call sign
and signal report.
During the QSO Party, ARRL will activate W1AW from Newington,
Connecticut. RSGB will activate GB2ZE with help from a team of
stations, including members of the GMDX Group of Scotland sharing the
operating duties. GB2ZE commemorates the call sign of Paul Godley, 2ZE,
who was sent by ARRL to the UK to lead the second Transatlantic Test in December 1921.
W1AW will be active for all 6 hours. Stations operating as GB2ZE will
follow this schedule:
- 0200 UTC, from the commemorative station at Ardrossan, Scotland
- 0300 UTC, from GM3YTS
- 0400 UTC, from GM0GAV
- 0500 UTC, from MM0ZBH
- 0600 UTC, from MM0GPZ
- 0700 UTC, from GM4ZUK until 0800 UTC, or until the band closes at
sunrise.
The GMDX Group will award a quaich -- a traditional Scottish drinking
cup representing friendship -- to the first stations in North America
and the UK to complete contacts with both W1AW and GB2ZE during the QSO
Party. A commemorative certificate will be available for download.
Participants will not have to submit logs. The official logs from W1AW
and GB2ZE will be used to determine the winners and for certificates.
For additional details, visit
http://www.arrl.org/transatlantic <
http://arrl.org/transatlantic> or
rsgb.org/main/activity/transatlantic-tests <
https://rsgb.org/main/activity/transatlantic-tests>.
DAYTON HAMVENTION EXPECTS TO BE LIVE EVENT IN 2022
Dayton Hamvention <
https://hamvention.org/>® organizers are planning to
mount an in-person show in 2022, the first following 2 years of
COVID-related cancellations. The event is set for May 20 - 22 at the
Greene County Fairgrounds and Expo Center in Xenia, Ohio. Last January, Hamvention organizers from the sponsoring Dayton Amateur Radio
Association (DARA <
http://www.w8bi.org/>) announced they were calling
off the 2021 event after considerable planning was already under way.
The Hamvention
Executive Committee cited lagging COVID-19 vaccine distribution in the
US and the emergence of a more communicable form of the virus.
Southgate Amateur Radio News quoted Hamvention General Chairman Rick
Allnutt, WS8G, as saying that Hamvention committees "have been meeting,
and volunteers are committed to making up for the time lost to pandemic cancellations." The Hamvention website is already accepting bookings
from vendors and inside exhibitors, and individual visitors can already
buy tickets, which Allnutt said, "are all printed and ready to go."
Nominations for the 2022 Hamvention Awards opened on November 1.
Hamvention seeks "the best of the best" nominees for its Technical
Achievement, Special Achievement, Amateur of the Year, and Club of the
Year awards. Nominations close on February 15, 2022. Submit nomination
forms via email <
awards@hamvention.org> or USPS to Hamvention Awards
Committee, Box 964, Dayton, OH 45401-0964. The 2022 Dayton Hamvention
is an ARRL-sanctioned event
<
http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/dayton-hamvention-7>. Read an expanded
version <
http://www.arrl.org/news/dayton-hamvention-expects-to-be-live-event-in-2022>.
ARRL PODCASTS SCHEDULE
The latest episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 23) features an
in-depth discussion of Q-signals, along with several on-the-air
examples.
The latest edition of the Eclectic Tech podcast (Episode 48) features a conversation about the technical aspects of the 1921 Transatlantic
Tests with Clark Burgard, N1BCG. We also chat about on-air activities surrounding the upcoming anniversary.
The On the Air and Eclectic Tech podcasts are sponsored by Icom. Both
podcasts are available on iTunes (iOS) and Stitcher (Android) as well
as on Blubrry -- On the Air <
https://blubrry.com/arrlontheair/> |
Eclectic Tech <
https://blubrry.com/eclectictech/>.
FALL ARRL SECTION MANAGER ELECTION RESULTS
The only contested seat for Section Manager (SM) in the fall election
cycle was in Kansas, where incumbent Ron Cowan, KB0DTI, of La Cygne,
came out on top in the two-person race. Cowan outpolled challenger
Lloyd Colston, KC5FM, of Arkansas City, 260 to 225. Ballots were
counted on November 23 at ARRL Headquarters. Cowan has served as Kansas
Section Manager since 2003. His new 2-year term will begin on January
1, 2022.
- In Alabama, Roger Parsons, KK4UDU, of Mulga, will become the new
Section Manager on January 1. Parsons was the only nominee for the
position. He has been an Assistant Section Manager and a District
Emergency Coordinator. Incumbent SM JVann Martin, W4JVM, who has served
as the Alabama Section Manager since 2016, decided not to run for a new
term.
- In Michigan, Les Butler, W8MSP, of Gregory, will become the new
Section Manager of Michigan when the new year arrives. He was the only
nominee to submit a petition by the nomination deadline. Butler will
succeed incumbent Michigan Section Manager Jim Kvochick, K8JK, whose
job will take him out of the state early next year. Kvochick has been
Michigan SM since 2018.
- In Delaware, the Section Manager position remains open, and a
re-solicitation for nominees will be issued this winter for an 18-month
term beginning on July 1, 2022. No nominating petitions were submitted
before the deadline in September. Incumbent Section Manager Mark
Stillman, KA3JUJ, is moving out of Delaware early next year and could
not run for another term after serving as SM since 2020.
These incumbent Section Managers faced no opposition and were declared
elected for new terms: David Stevens, KL7EB (Alaska); Mike Patterson,
N6JGA (East Bay); Bill Mader, K8TE (New Mexico); John Kitchens, NS6X
(Santa Barbara); David Thomas, KM4NYI (Tennessee), and Raymond Lajoie,
AA1SE (Western Massachusetts).
An interim Section Manager (SM) has been appointed in Maine,
effective on December 1, after incumbent SM Robert Gould, N1WJO,
resigned for personal reasons. Gould had served since July 2020. ARRL
Field Services Manager Mike Walters, W8ZY, appointed Phil Duggan, N1EP,
of Milbridge as interim Section Manager to complete the current term,
which ends on June 30, 2022. Duggan is a retired US Navy electronics
technician chief and active in emergency communications. He served
previously as Maine Section Emergency Coordinator. Duggan is active in promoting amateur radio, especially among youth.
Nominating petitions for the next Maine SM term of office are due at
ARRL Headquarters no later than March 4, 2022. See the January 2022
issue of QST for the nomination announcement or the ARRL website for
further details
<
http://www.arrl.org/section-terms-nomination-information>.
YOTA MONTH CONTINUES TO EXPAND INTO THE AMERICAS
December is YOTA Month <
http://events.ham-yota.com/>, celebrating and encouraging Youngsters/Youth On the Air. Amateur radio operators who
are 25 years old and younger will be helming special event stations
around the world throughout December in celebration of youth in amateur
radio. YOTA Month stations will be on all bands and modes at various
times.
In the US, the call signs will once again be K8Y, K8O, K8T, and K8A.
Three new DXCC entities will be participating for the first time.
Argentina will be active as LR1YOTA, Cuba as CO0YOTA, and Peru as
OA0YOTA. Other countries may be added. Listen for these stations, as
well as other call signs with YOTA suffixes.
Last year, 28 operators in the Americas participated in YOTA Month, and
this year, Youth in the Americas anticipates an increased level of
youth activity from South America. Last year, young hams around the
world surpassed their goal of 100,000 contacts during YOTA Month, with
a final tally of 137,000. Stations in the Americas logged 14,700 of
those contacts.
Overlapping with YOTA Month is Round 3 of the YOTA Contest, December
30, 2021, 1200 - 2359 UTC.
More information about YOTA Month is available on the Youth on the Air <
http://youthontheair.org/> website, which is sponsored by Icom
America.
Tambien disponible en Español <
http://www.arrl.org/news/yota-month-continues-to-expand-into-the-americas>.
ARRL LEARNING NETWORK WEBINARS
Visit the ARRL Learning Network
<
http://www.arrl.org/arrl-learning-network> (a members-only benefit) to register, check on upcoming webinars, and to view previously recorded
sessions.
More webinars are coming soon!
ARRL members may register for upcoming presentations and view
previously recorded Learning Network <
http://www.arrl.org/arrl-learning-network> webinars. ARRL-affiliated
radio clubs may also use the recordings as presentations for club
meetings, mentoring new and current hams, and discussing amateur radio
topics.
The ARRL Learning Network schedule is subject to change.
IARU REPORTS ANOTHER OVER-THE-HORIZON RADAR SYSTEM IS UNDER
CONSTRUCTION IN INDIA
In October, the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU
<
http://www.iaru.org/>) Region 1 Monitoring System (IARUMS <
https://www.iaru-r1.org/>) newsletter reported on the continuing run
of over-the-horizon radar (OTHR) troublemakers that often cause severe interference on amateur radio bands -- primarily in IARU Regions 1 and
3 but are audible in the rest of the world. Now, another threat is
looming, IARU Region 1 says <
https://www.iaru-r1.org/>.
IARU Region 1 has cited a report by Alpha Defense India that the
Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO
<
https://www.drdo.gov.in/>) premier
radar development laboratory is working on an OTHR system to keep a
close eye on Chinese movements in the Indian Ocean region. The system
design has already been completed, according to the report. The
prototype stage comes next.
According to the report, the radar prototype is to have two different
types of radar arraysâ-‰--â-‰a log-periodic wire antenna array and a
broadband monopole antenna array. It is believed that the log-periodic
antenna array will be used to determine the best maximum usable
frequency (MUF), which is known to depend on current conditions in the ionosphere and the sunspot cycle. The monopole antenna will consist of
a 32-element array. The actual system will be developed after extensive
testing and evaluation, but the report gave no timeline or completion
date.
"OTHRs often massively interfere with amateur radio," the IARU Region 1
report said, citing the well-known Russian "Contayner" OTHR, an OTHR at
the UK base in the Republic of Cyprus, and others in Iran and China.
"They are present daily on several frequencies within the exclusive
amateur radio HF bands," IARU Region 1 said. Read an expanded version <
http://www.arrl.org/news/iaru-reports-another-over-the-horizon-radar-system-is-under-construction-in-india>.
ARDC GRANTS WILL EXPAND EMERGENCY CAPABILITIES IN HAITI AND THE US
VIRGIN ISLANDS
Grants from Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC
<
https://www.ampr.org/>) will benefit amateur radio emergency
communication networks in Haiti and the US Virgin Islands (USVI).
The $14,864 grant to the Haiti International Friendship Amateur Radio
Club (HIFARC <
https://www.facebook.com/HIFARC/>) will enable the club
to set up a network of HF stations to provide emergency communications
to remote areas cut off by the August 2021 earthquake. The
7.2-magnitude earthquake made evident the urgent need for better
emergency communications. The earthquake completely cut off
communications to some areas of the country, making emergency
responders unable to get information on the extent of the damage caused
and what supplies and equipment were needed. The lack of communication capability hindered the ability of responders to deal with the
humanitarian crisis.
HIFARC, in coordination with the Radio Club d'Haiti, plans to set up an
HF emergency communications network. Haitian amateurs have identified
six potential stations, and HIFARC plans to provide the equipment and
personnel to set them up. Grant funds will allow HIFARC to outfit each
station with a small generator, an HF transceiver, a power supply, and
a wire antenna.
Working closely with the Radio Club d'Haiti, HIFARC helps to train new
hams and bolster the emergency communications network there.
The St. Croix Amateur Radio Club (STXARC <
https://www.vihamradio.org/>)
in the USVI will use its ARDC grant to augment the territory's repeater infrastructure, enabling the purchase of backup repeaters, improving
repeater coverage, and training and equipping new hams.
When two Category 5 hurricanes -- Irma and Maria -- hit the USVI in
2017, hams volunteered to help. The two monster storms left the power
grid and communication infrastructure in shambles, with 95% of St.
Croix's electric utility poles and antenna structures dismantled. The
USVI government's primary land mobile radio (LMR) trunked radio system
was essentially non-functional, and the Army National Guard couldn't be
heard on any radio frequency for a week following the storms.
Territory amateur radio clubs sprang into action, employing skills
learned during hundreds of hours of training exercises. St. Croix hams
quickly established a daily HF net to support first responders. A
single surviving repeater provided limited communication between
islands.
The $27,955 ARDC grant will allow the Virgin Islands Amateur Radio
Group (VIARG) -- a group formed after the 2017 hurricanes -- to
purchase backup repeaters, more resilient antennas that will also
expand coverage, and training materials. Read an expanded version <
http://www.arrl.org/news/ardc-grants-will-expand-emergency-capabilities-in-haiti-and-the-us-virgin-islands>.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- The Southwest Ohio DX Association (SWODXA) has given its W8OK Award <
http://www.swodxa.org/w8ok-award> to John Comella, N8AA. It is given
to "the SWODXA member who exhibits those traits that Frank Schwab
embodied." Comella was a co-founder of the Dayton Hamvention and
founder of Dayton SKYWARN, as well as a top-tier contester and CW
operator. N8AA was licensed in 1954.
- Raja Chari, KI5LIU, is the newest commander of a NASA space mission.
He and his three fellow members of SpaceX Crew-3 are now aboard the International Space Station. It promises to be a busy 6 months for the
crew, which includes Matthias Maurer, KI5KFH, from the European Space
Agency. The German astronaut will be involved in more than 35
experiments while on board the ISS. He will also be using the German
call sign DP0ISS during a dozen scheduled contacts with German schools
through the Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS)
program.
- PH21XMAS will be a special Merry Christmas 2021 operation, conducted
jointly by Radio Scouting, PI4RS, and Plusscouts, PA3EFR/J, from
various locations in the Netherlands. PH21XMAS will be on the air
December 6 - January 3, and PH22HNY will be on the air December 10 -
January 31. Operation will be on SSB and digital modes.
AMATEUR RADIO IN THE NEWS
ARRL Public Information Officers, Coordinators, and many other member-volunteers help keep amateur radio and ARRL in the news <
http://www.arrl.org/media-hits>.
- RamSat taking photos while orbiting Earth <
https://autos.yahoo.com/autos/ramsat-taking-photos-while-orbiting-010006564.html>
/ Yahoo! (California) November 21, 2021
- What Ham Radio Can Teach Us About Power Efficiency <
https://cleantechnica.com/2021/11/17/what-ham-radio-can-teach-us-about-power-efficiency/>
/ CleanTechnica, November 17, 2021
- Alike, but Not Alike: Broadcast vs. Ham Radio <
https://www.radioworld.com/tech-and-gear/tech-tips/alike-but-not-alike-broadcast-vs-ham-radio>
/ Radio World (Washington, DC) November 7, 2021
Share <
newsmedia@arrl.org> any amateur radio media hits you spot with
us.
ARRL AUTHOR, QST TECHNICAL EDITOR JOEL HALLAS, W1ZR, SK
Retired QST Technical Editor Joel R. Hallas, W1ZR, of Westport,
Connecticut, died on November 25. An ARRL member, he was 79. Hallas
retired in 2013 but remained active as a contributing editor, handling
the popular "The Doctor is In" column in QST and the podcast of the
same name. He had been a radio amateur since 1955.
"Joel was not only brilliant, he shared that brilliance with the ham
radio community in a way that taught innumerable hams things they
needed to know in order to experience success and enjoyment," said ARRL Publications and Editorial Department Manager Becky Schoenfeld, W1BXY.
"He was a fine mind, a generous mentor and colleague, and a consummate gentleman. He will be missed."
Retired ARRL Publications Manager Steve Ford, WB8IMY, recalled Hallas
as "an iconic figure in amateur radio media as a prolific author of QST articles and ARRL books, and even in the audio podcast community. I
greatly enjoyed being Joel's sidekick for the popular 'Doctor is In'
podcast. He had a wry sense of humor both on and off the microphone and
a remarkably stoic attitude toward the illness that would eventually
claim his life."
Hallas authored six books about communications technology, published by
ARRL. His titles include Basic Radio; Basic Antennas; The ARRL Guide to
Antenna Tuners; Hamspeak; The Care and Feeding of Transmission Lines; Understanding Your Antenna Analyzer, and The Radio Amateur's Workshop.
Hallas earned his bachelor's in electrical engineering from the
University of Connecticut and an MSEE from Northeastern University. He previously had worked for Raytheon as a radar systems engineer and for
GTE as a nuclear weapons effects (electromagnetic pulse) analyst and as
a satellite and terrestrial communications systems engineer, as well as
for IBM and AT&T. He also taught at the college level.
He enjoyed sailing, as described in the July 2009 issue of QST. He and
his 24-foot sloop Windfall -- fully equipped with a ham station that
used the insulated backstay as an HF antenna -- graced the front cover.
Survivors include his wife of 58 years, Nancy, W1NCY.
PAST ARRL ROCKY MOUNTAIN DIVISION DIRECTOR CLAUDE MAER, W0IC, SK
Past ARRL Rocky Mountain Division Director Claude Maer, Jr, W0IC, of
Denver, Colorado, died on November 16. An ARRL member, he was 102.
Maer grew up in Fort Worth, Texas, and attended Rice University in
Houston, graduating in 1940 with distinction and enlisting in the US
Army Air Corps (USAAC) during World War II. Maer served at various
postings, including Lowry Air Force Base in Denver, as well as in
Azores (Portugal), where he worked in communications and attained the
rank of captain.
Maer told
<
http://memory.loc.gov/diglib/vhp/story/loc.natlib.afc2001001.71939/> a Veterans History Project interviewer several years ago that his
eventual route to military service really began when he got his ham
radio license at the age of 12 in 1932. As a result, he was invited to
attend Texas Army National Guard summer camp.
Maer served as the ARRL Rocky Mountain Division Vice Director for only
1 month before then-Rocky Mountain Division Director Franklin Matejka,
W0DD (SK), announced his resignation to take a job overseas. Maer
acceded to Director and served in that leadership position until 1960.
Read an expanded version <
http://www.arrl.org/news/past-arrl-rocky-mountain-division-director-claude-maer-w0ic-sk>.
THE K7RA SOLAR UPDATE
Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Solar activity was up this week.
Average daily sunspot number increased from 26.9 to 46.1, and average
daily solar flux was up 10.8 points to 90.9. Geomagnetic indicators
were a little higher. Average daily planetary A index increased from
7.9 to 8.7, and average daily middle latitude A index from 5.4 to 6.3.
Two new sunspot groups emerged on November 26, another on November 28,
and two more on November 30.
On December 1, Spaceweather.com <
http://www.spaceweather.com/>
announced a geomagnetic storm watch: "Minor geomagnetic storms are
possible on December 3 when a CME might sideswipe Earth's magnetic
field. The storm cloud was hurled into space on November 29 by an
erupting filament of magnetism in the sun's southern hemisphere.
According to NOAA computer models, the bulk of the CME should sail
south of our planet with a near miss [or] just as likely as a glancing
blow."
Predicted solar flux for the next month has flux values peaking at 94
on December 27 - 28. The forecast sees values of 86 and 84 on December
2 - 3; 80 on December 4 - 5; 78 on December 6 - 7; 76 and 78 on
December 8 - 9; 82 on December 10 - 12; 80 on December 13 - 14; 85 on
December 15 - 21; 82 and 80 on December 22 - 23; 78 on December 24 -
25; 92 on December 26; 94 on December 27 - 28; 88 on December 29 -
January 1; 85, 82, and 80 on January 2 - 4, and 82 on January 5 - 8.
Predicted planetary A index is 10, 16, 12, and 8 on December 2 - 5; 12,
10, and 8 on December 6 - 8; 5 on December 9 - 11; 8, 12, and 10 on
December 12 - 14; 5 on December 15 - 16; 8 and 10 on December 17 - 18;
5 on December 19 - 25; 8 on December 26; 5 on December 27 - 29; 10 on
December 30 - 31; 8 on January 1, and 5 on January 2 - 7.
Robert Marston, AA6XE, offered these observations:
"We now stand at exactly 2 years since the Solar Cycle 24/25 minimum
was recorded, and the most notable attribute of Solar Cycle 25 is its
slow climb out. We have seen bursts of activity from the sun, where
numerous active regions pop up with only a handful actually developing
into numbered sunspot groups. The bulk of new regions that form quickly
decay away."
There will be more from AA6XE in Friday's report and bulletin.
Sunspot numbers for November 25 - December 1 were 20, 52, 53, 53, 47,
61, and 37, with a mean of 46.1. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 93.6,
92.3, 91.8, 92.2, 89.8, 90, and 86.4, with a mean of 90.9. Estimated
planetary A indices were 5, 4, 5, 9, 9, 11, and 18, with a mean of 8.7.
Middle latitude A index was 3, 3, 3, 7, 6, 8, and 14, with a mean of
6.3.
A comprehensive K7RA Solar Update is posted Fridays on the ARRL
website. For more information concerning radio propagation, visit <
http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals> the ARRL Technical
Information Service, read
<
http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere> "What the Numbers
Mean...," and check out <
http://k9la.us/> the Propagation Page of Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA.
A propagation bulletin archive <
http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation> is available. For customizable propagation charts, visit the VOACAP Online for Ham Radio <
https://www.voacap.com/hf/> website.
Share <
k7ra@arrl.net> your reports and observations.
JUST AHEAD IN RADIOSPORT
- December 3 -- NCCC RTTY Sprint
- December 3 -- NCCC Sprint CW
- December 3 -- K1USN Slow Speed Test (CW, maximum 13 WPM)
- December 3 - 5 -- ARRL 160-Meter Contest (CW)
<
http://www.arrl.org/160-meter>
- December 4 -- Wake-Up! QRP Sprint (CW)
- December 4 - 5 -- UFT Meeting (CW)
- December 4 - 5 -- PRO CW Contest
- December 4 -- 144 Two-Meter Classic Sprint (CW, phone)
- December 4 - 5 -- FT Roundup
- December 6 -- K1USN Slow Speed Test (CW, maximum 20 WPM)
- December 7 -- Worldwide Sideband Activity Contest
- December 7 -- ARS Spartan Sprint (CW)
- December 7 -- RTTYops Weeksprint
- December 8 -- NAQCC CW Sprint
- December 8 -- VHF-UHF FT8 Activity Contest
- December 11 - 12 -- ARRL 10-Meter Contest (CW, phone) <
http://www.arrl.org/10-meter>
- December 12 -- 160-Meter Transatlantic Centenary QSO Party <
http://www.arrl.org/transatlantic> (CW)
UPCOMING SECTION, STATE, AND DIVISION CONVENTIONS
- December 10 - 11 -- ARRL West Central Florida Section Convention <
http://www.fgcarc.org/> (Tampa Bay Hamfest), Plant City, Florida
- January 22, 2022 ARRL Midwest Division Convention <
http://winterfest.slsrc.org> (Winterfest), Collinsville, Illinois
- January 28 - 29, 2022 -- ARRL Delta Division Convention <
http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/jackson-ms-capital-city-hamfest-2022-arrl-delta-division-convention>
(Capital City Hamfest 2022), Jackson, Mississippi.
- Feburary 10 - 13, 2022 -- 2022 ARRL National Convention <
http://www.arrl.org/expo> at Orlando HamCation®, Orlando, Florida
- February 18 - 19, 2022 ARRL Southwestern Division Convention <
http://www.yumahamfest.org/> (Yuma Hamfest), Yuma, Arizona
Search the ARRL Hamfest and Convention Database
<
http://www.arrl.org/hamfests> to find events in your area.
ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for
Amateur Radio News and Information
- Join or Renew Today! <
http://www.arrl.org/join> Eligible US-based
members can elect to receive QST <
http://www.arrl.org/qst> or On the
Air <
http://www.arrl.org/on-the-air-magazine> magazine in print when
they join ARRL or when they renew their membership. All members can
access digital editions of all four ARRL magazines: QST, On the Air,
QEX, and NCJ.
- Listen to ARRL Audio News <
http://www.arrl.org/arrl-audio-news>,
available every Friday.
- The ARRL Letter is available in an accessible format, posted weekly
to the Blind-hams Groups.io <
https://groups.io/g/blind-hams> email
group. The group is dedicated to discussions about amateur radio as it
concerns blind hams, plus related topics including ham radio use of
adaptive technology.
Subscribe to...
- NCJ -- National Contest Journal <
http://www.ncjweb.com/>. Published bimonthly, features articles by top contesters, letters, hints,
statistics, scores, NA Sprint, and QSO parties.
- QEX <
http://www.arrl.org/qex> -- A Forum for Communications
Experimenters <
http://www.arrl.org/qex>. Published bimonthly, features technical articles, construction projects, columns, and other items of
interest to radio amateurs and communications professionals.
Free of charge to ARRL members...
- Subscribe <
http://www.arrl.org/myarrl-account-management#%21/edit-info-email_subscriptions>
to the ARES Letter (monthly public service and emergency communications
news), the ARRL Contest Update (biweekly contest newsletter), Division
and Section news alerts and much more!
- Find ARRL on Facebook <
https://www.facebook.com/ARRL.org/>! Follow us
on Twitter <
https://twitter.com/arrl> and Instagram <
https://www.instagram.com/arrlhq>!
The ARRL Letter is published Thursdays, 48 times each year. ARRL
members may subscribe at no cost or unsubscribe by editing their Member
Data Page as described at
http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/.
Copyright (c) 2021 American Radio Relay League, Incorporated.
Use and distribution of this publication, or any portion thereof, is
permitted for non-commercial or educational purposes, with attribution.
All other purposes require written permission.
<
http://www.arrl.org/>
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)